• Title/Summary/Keyword: Charring

Search Result 45, Processing Time 0.025 seconds

Charring Properties of Structural Timbers using Cone Calorimeter (콘칼로리미터를 이용한 구조용 목재의 탄화 특성)

  • Hong, Seong In;An, Jae Hong;Choi, Yun Jeong;Kim, Byoung il
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
    • /
    • 2023.11a
    • /
    • pp.85-86
    • /
    • 2023
  • In this study, charring properties such as charring layer and mass change of wood with temperature were investigated through cone calorimeter test on douglas-fir, which is representative of various wood structures. the results showed that ignitions at 390 degrees and a charring layer is formed.

  • PDF

Charring Properties of Glued Laminated Timber Columns using Domestic Larch Exposed to High Temperatures (고온에 노출된 국내산 낙엽송 구조용 집성재 기둥의 탄화 특성)

  • An, Jae-Hong;Choi, Yun-Jeong;Kim, Se-Jong
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Building Construction
    • /
    • v.23 no.1
    • /
    • pp.23-33
    • /
    • 2023
  • It is widely known that the level of fire resistance of wooden structure is determined by a charring rate or charring depth, and these are adopted for fire design. In this study, specimens of domestic larch column with a lamination wooden type were prepared and the fire resistance properties such as the charring depth, load ratio and the specific charring rate suggested by EN Code investigated. Test results showed that as expected, the weakest part was the corner of the column, so that the charring depth of the corner was deeper than the other parts of the column. For the load ratio less than 0.9, it had little effect on the charring depth.

Estimation of the Properties for a Charring Material Using the RPSO Algorithm (RPSO 알고리즘을 이용한 탄화 재료의 열분해 물성치 추정)

  • Chang, Hee-Chul;Park, Won-Hee;Yoon, Kyung-Beom;Kim, Tae-Kuk
    • The KSFM Journal of Fluid Machinery
    • /
    • v.14 no.1
    • /
    • pp.34-41
    • /
    • 2011
  • Fire characteristics can be analyzed more realistically by using more accurate properties related to the fire dynamics and one way to acquire these fire properties is to use one of the inverse property estimation techniques. In this study two optimization algorithms which are frequently applied for the inverse heat transfer problems are selected to demonstrate the procedure of obtaining pyrolysis properties of charring material with relatively simple thermal decomposition. Thermal decomposition is occurred at the surface of the charring material heated by receiving the radiative energy from external heat sources and in this process the heat transfer through the charring material is simplified by an unsteady 1-dimensional problem. The basic genetic algorithm(GA) and repulsive particle swarm optimization(RPSO) algorithm are used to find the eight properties of a charring material; thermal conductivity(virgin, char), specific heat(virgin, char), char density, heat of pyrolysis, pre-exponential factor and activation energy by using the surface temperature and mass loss rate history data which are obtained from the calculated experiments. Results show that the RPSO algorithm has better performance in estimating the eight pyrolysis properties than the basic GA for problems considered in this study.

A Study on the Burning Rate of Fire Retardant Treated Wood (난연처리된 목재의 연소속도에 관한 연구)

  • Park, Hyung-Ju
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
    • /
    • v.22 no.6
    • /
    • pp.46-54
    • /
    • 2007
  • The purpose of this study was to examines the burning rate of fire retardant treated wood in the cone heater with a one-dimensional integral model. The wood samples used in this study were four species. The species of woods are Redwood, White oak, Douglas fir and Maple. Each sample was nominally 50mm thick and 100mm square. Samples were exposed to a range of incident heat fluxes 10 to $35kW/m^2$ using the cone heater. A one-dimension integral model has been used to predict burning rate, heat of gasification, flame heat fluxes, charring rate and char depth of samples. As a result measurement of mass loss rate, softwoods(Redwood and Douglas fir) has relatively low value than those for hardwoods(White oak and Maple). Average charring rate of woods in case of fire retardant treatment showed reduction effect of 41.29%, 50.00%, 48.18% and 60.82% for Redwood, Douglas fir, White fir and Maple, respectively. Almost all the predictions from integral model showed faster charring than those measured. Average difference between predictions and experimental data was 16%, 9.5% and 11.8% for N, F1 and F2 respectively. Water-soluble fire retardant used in this study find out more effect in hardwood than softwood from the result of measurement of mass loss rate and average charring rate.

Carbon Medicine in Ancient China

  • Yang, Hongyan;Fu, Zengxiang;Huang, Xingli;Ma, Binrui
    • Carbon letters
    • /
    • v.6 no.4
    • /
    • pp.255-256
    • /
    • 2005
  • In traditional Chinese medicine, some herbs are used after toasting or roasting. The process is called "Zhi Tan" in Chinese, which means charring, and the herbs after the treatment is called carbon medicine. Carbon medicine is widely used to arrest bleeding in traditional Chinese medicine. The paper introduces the records, development and applications of carbon medicine in ancient China. The earliest record found about carbon medicine was in the remains of Han dynasty (BC206-A.D.8). The paper also introduces the process of charring herbs and mechanism of carbon medicine in arresting bleeding. Calcium iron and tan released during the charring are believed as main factors for arresting bleeding, helped with porous surface structure of active carbon.

  • PDF

ABLATING AND CHARRING OF TWO DIMENSIONAL HEAT SHIELD MATERIALS

  • Shabani Mohammad Reza;Rahimian Mohammad Hassan
    • Journal of computational fluids engineering
    • /
    • v.10 no.1
    • /
    • pp.16-23
    • /
    • 2005
  • The objective of this research is to estimate two dimensional ablating and charring of heat shield materials in severe aero-thermal heat transfer. This estimation requires an accurate and rapid technique for its serious heat transfer with a moving boundary. Aerodynamic heating is obtained by an explicit relation which is a function of Mach number and air condition, while a fully implicit method is used for heat transfer calculations. Moving boundary is captured by FLIAR method which is a subgroup of VOF. Thickness of ablating and charring of heat shield, temperature of the moving surface and rate of radiation heat are calculated and compared with references. The results are in good agreement with other calculations.

Comparative Analysis of Fire Resistance in Glued Laminated Timber: The Impact of Adhesives and Surface Direction (구조용 집성재의 접착제 종류 및 접착면 방향성에 따른 내화성능 비교 분석)

  • Choi, Yun-Jeong;An, Jae-Hong;Baik, Kwon-hyuk
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Building Construction
    • /
    • v.23 no.6
    • /
    • pp.761-772
    • /
    • 2023
  • The fire resistance design of timber structures involves calculating the residual section based on charring depth, which is then utilized in structural design. Charring depth is determined from fire-resistance test results in Korea, which currently do not account for the charring properties of the adhesive used in Glued Laminated Timber(GLT) production. This study fabricated GLT using various adhesives employed in domestic GLT production, comparing the charring properties by adhesive type and the fire resistance performance relative to the directionality of the laminated surface. Melamine demonstrated the most advantageous fire resistance performance, followed by resorcinol and polyurethane. Furthermore, it was established that the laminated section exhibited a higher charring rate, influenced by the adhesive, compared to the laminated surface, which significantly impacts the fire resistance performance.

An Experimental Study on the Charring Rate of Solid Sawn Timber Exposed to Fire (화재에 노출된 제재목의 탄화속도에 대한 실험적 연구)

  • Yeo, In-Hwan;Park, Kyung-Hoon;Cho, Kyung-Suk;Min, Byung-Yeol;Yoon, Myung-O
    • Fire Science and Engineering
    • /
    • v.25 no.3
    • /
    • pp.78-84
    • /
    • 2011
  • In this study, we have measured the charring rate of solid sawn timber as a preceding step for develop performance based fire safety design method of wood framed building structures. The follows are the summary of fire test results carried out with $400{\times}400$ mm cross-section Douglas-fir in varied of thickness and grain directions. I) When the timber thickness increase under same dimension, the charring rate decreases gradually. It is seemed the charring layer up on a thickness roles as a insulation, gives combustion delaying time to specimen. 2) The charring rates measured at different depths (10, 20, 30, 40 mm) in timber which varying thickness (20, 40, 80, 120 mm) when exposed maximum 1 hour standard fire increase by 30 mm depth, but decrease at 40 mm. It is seemed the minimum charr layer should be 30 mm for having role of insulation. 3) The charring rate of cross section surface (direction of perpendicular to grain) was more high than that of grain direction. It can be explained by the cracks and gaps from greater charr contraction made more heat flux incident into timber.

X-Ray Diffractometric Study on Modification Mechanism of Matrixes for Electrothermal AAS Determination of Volatile Lead and Bismuth

  • Kim, Yeong Sang;Choe, Jong Mun
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
    • /
    • v.21 no.1
    • /
    • pp.56-60
    • /
    • 2000
  • The mechanism of a matrix modification for the trace determination of volatile lead and bismuth by an electro-thermal atomic absorption spectrophotometry was studied by a X-ray diffractometry (XRD). For the investigation of structures, the ash products of the elements were produced by using a palladium as a matrix modifier with or without aluminum or nickel as an auxiliary modifier. The same charring conditions as in the analysis of samples were applied together with much concentrated solution of analytical elements and modifiers in a graphite furnace to get a large amount of the product for XRD. The XRD patterns showed PbPd3 for lead and BiPd3 for bismuth. These mean that the reaction procedures through the charring and atomization were changed from $Pb^{2+}$ ${\rightarrow}$ PbO ${\rightarrow}$$Pb^0$ to $Pb^{2+}$ ${\rightarrow}$ PbO ${\rightarrow}PbPd_3$ ${\rightarrow}$ Pb o for lead and from $Bi^{3+}$ ${\rightarrow}$ BiO ${\rightarrow}$ Bi o to $Bi^{3+}$ ${\rightarrow}$ BiO ${\rightarrow}$ $BiPd_3$ ${\rightarrow}$ $Bi^0$ for bismuth by the addition of modifiers. The volatile elements were stabilized by the formation of palladium alloys through a charring process. Charring temperatures were raised about 500 $^{\circ}C$ by the alloying and the atomization was also stabilized for the enhancement of sensitivities.

A Study on Charring Rate of Wood Exposed to a Constant Incident Radiation Heat Flux (일정한 복사열원에 노출된 목재의 탄화속도에 관한 연구)

  • Park Hyung-Ju;Kim Hong
    • Fire Science and Engineering
    • /
    • v.18 no.4
    • /
    • pp.86-92
    • /
    • 2004
  • We tested five specimens of each species at each of five constant external heat flux levels (10, 15, 20, 25. and 35㎾/㎡). An Cone heater was used to expose the wood specimens to the heat flux. The 100-by 100-by 50-㎜ specimens were of four species: Redwood, White oak, Douglas fir, Maple. In result of test, charring of wood exposed to a constant external heat flux can be considered a linear with function of time. As compared with the charring rates Redwood is most rapidly, but on the other hand Douglas fir is most slowly. When the external heat flux is 35㎾/㎡, the charring rate is rapidly about twice then 10㎾/㎡. Using the Equation (2), the estimates for u were 1.02, 1.16, 1.23, 1.32, and 1.44 for the 10, 15, 20, 25, and 35 kw/m2 constant external exposure levels, respectively.